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Take a virtual global tour with Birds of World

Travel to Peru to see the flamboyant Andean cock-of-the-rock, or come face-to-face with the show-stopping great gray owl on the fringe of northern boreal forest – all without leaving home, thanks to the new online reference.

Diane McAllister/Cornell Lab of Ornithology

The great grey owl.

Answers to questions about any bird species, anywhere on Earth, can be found in this new digital publication from the .

“Birds of the World provides scientists, students, bird-watchers and naturalists the sharpest picture yet of the remarkable lives of birds,” said Brian Sullivan, project leader at the Cornell Lab. “Our team has built a fast, easy-to-use platform full of deep content and captivating media that reveals the ecology, biology and true-to-life character of every species.”

Each species account is enhanced with audio, video and images from contributors around the world.Birds of the World contains 10,721 species accounts and overviews of all 249 bird families. Content includes:

  • detailed life history for every species;
  • taxonomic histories;
  • illustrations of every species and many subspecies;
  • science-based range and abundance maps;
  • image gallery detailing plumages, geographic variation and behavior;
  • an expanding video gallery showcasing bird behaviors; and
  • in-depth audio recordings of songs, calls and non-vocal sounds.

Birds of the World is deeply integrated with two of the Cornell Lab’s signature data archives: images, sounds and video from the Macaulay Library; and scientific maps and charts, developed from data gathered by the global eBird program.

– Pat Leonard

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